The CLARITY Act picked up its first major public law enforcement endorsement on July 1 when the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE) formally backed the bill, and two days later Major County Sheriffs of America withdrew its opposition entirely, shifting to neutral.
Two organized law enforcement bodies moving constructively on the same digital asset legislation within 72 hours is not coincidental, it reflects deliberate outreach and signals that the Senate floor fight is now a live negotiation, not a procedural formality.
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NOBLE’s July 1 letter to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer was addressed to the two officials who control Senate floor timing, a deliberate signal that the endorsement was meant to move the legislative calendar, not just the public narrative.
The organization, which represents more than 3,000 members across nearly 60 chapters worldwide including chief executives and command-level officials, cited four specific provisions driving its support: expanded regulatory obligations on digital asset businesses, enhanced forfeiture authorities, new transparency requirements, and oversight rules for digital asset kiosks.
Critically, NOBLE addressed the enforcement-gap argument head-on. The organization stated explicitly that the legislation does not alter the federal criminal authorities investigators and prosecutors rely on daily, money laundering, unlicensed money transmitting, conspiracy, aiding and abetting, and sanctions enforcement statutes all remain intact under the bill’s current text.
That framing directly rebuts the criticism that had dogged earlier CLARITY Act drafts, where anti-corruption groups argued the bill could create exploitable gaps in illicit-finance enforcement.
Stand With Crypto, the crypto advocacy group representing more than 2.6 million U.S. supporters, called NOBLE the first major law enforcement organization to publicly endorse the CLARITY Act.
That distinction matters for Senate Democrats who have been most vocal about enforcement preservation, an endorsement from a respected law enforcement body with NOBLE’s institutional standing provides political cover that no industry lobbying group can supply.
“Law enforcement voices are engaging constructively on digital asset legislation, and the first major endorsement is on the books.”
Stand With Crypto said this after the NOBLE letter was made public, per reporting on the NOBLE endorsement development.
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Major County Sheriffs of America, whose members collectively serve more than 130 million citizens through offices employing at least 700 personnel each, sent its own letter on July 3, this one addressed to Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott and ranking member Elizabeth Warren.
MCSA’s position shift from opposition to neutral turned on Section 604, the provision incorporating the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act, which establishes liability protections for blockchain developers and service providers who do not custody or control digital assets.

MCSA said continued review and discussions around Section 604 clarified how the administration interprets and plans to implement that provision.
The organization stopped short of endorsement, it explicitly noted room to further strengthen the legislation to support both responsible innovation and state and local law enforcement needs, but it withdrew formal opposition.
Removing an active opponent from the ledger is not the same as gaining a supporter, but in a Senate that requires 60 votes for floor passage, eliminating organized resistance from an association representing major population centers carries real procedural weight.
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The post NOBLE Endorses CLARITY Act as Major County Sheriffs Drop Opposition appeared first on Cryptonews.